In this article concerning pastoral self-leadership and church health in church
plants, the author provides statistics of how most Protestant denomination
memberships are declining due to the advancement of the ever-changing
post-modern era in which we find ourselves. After claiming that the church has
“lost touch with the communities they are trying to reach,” he asserts that
churches must change in order to carry out the Great Commission effectively in
the twenty-first century and beyond. One way this change needs to happen is the
planting of new churches in which he believes will allow the Lord to do a “new
thing” (Isa. 43:19). New church leaders are learning that the gospel is best
preached through the medium of culture and so many churches are now moving into
schools, civic auditoriums, movie theaters, hotels, funeral homes, and
industrial warehouses. The author then speaks of the qualifications that
distinguish a pastor from an effective church-planting pastor. A church
planting pastor, he insists, demands much more of a person since it requires
hard work, enduring loneliness, adaptation, self-initiative, self-motivation
and a high level of faith. The idea of self-leadership, which is the leadership
people exercise over themselves, is an ability he speaks of that is of highly
important in becoming a church planting pastor. This psychological study has
proved that those who can lead and influence themselves produce positive
results in their ministry pursuits. Throughout the remainder of the article,
the author dives in to what the ability of self-leadership entails and defends
this method as not being just another example of the “unbiblical
individualistic American spirit of every person for themselves” but ensures
that self-leadership is in the context of community. This method is designed to
enhance the empowering of leadership and passionate spirituality so that
pastors can effectively lead healthy churches of the twenty-first century.
I appreciated the psychological idea of self-leadership from this article and
found it to be very helpful for involvement in Church ministry. I agree that
much of the fruit our lives produce come from the way our minds are conditioned
to think. I also agree with the author that the shift from investing into
church health rather than church growth is very important. Beeson’s 8 church
health characteristics of authentic community, empowering leadership, engaging
worship, functional structures, intentional evangelism, mobilized laity,
passionate spirituality and transforming discipleship should all mark our
churches. These characteristics assume an active role in all aspects of church
life rather than a narrow-minded pursuit of growth and numbers. While
considering the idea of church planting, I began to be intrigued by the idea of
starting a new community of faith and could understand how starting a church
from the ground up might be an effective way to infuse new life and passion
into what God intended for His church. The church does not need new structures
and programs; the church needs a transformation and renewal of the way we think
(Romans 12:2). This self-leadership model gives us practical steps to “demolish
arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of
God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ” (2 Cor
10:5). I firmly believe, as Christians, that we need to live a life of
discipline. This discipline comes, not only from our daily commitments and
devotions but a discipline of guiding our minds in the right way to think. We
need the mind of Christ so that we can know what Jesus would do in the context
of our culture. This assumes a deep relationship with God through the reading
and meditation of His Word but also a radical dependence and sensitivity to the
Holy Spirit. This is why I don’t consider self-leadership to necessarily be a
new idea but a scientific acknowledgement of what God has already set before us
in His Word. May we, through the power and direction of the Holy Spirit, train
our minds to think like Christ and therefore be the church God intends us to be
in this era of history.
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